it acts as a weak acid.
Halogens acids doesn't react with water; they form a solution.
Acids form salts, bust bases do not
These are acids or salts.
The acids all contribute hydrogen ions to the solution.
acids
Halogens acids doesn't react with water; they form a solution.
Acids form salts, bust bases do not
By Arrhenius's definition it isdissociatesin water to release H+. Which it does:HCl (in water) --> H+ + Cl-By the Bronsted-Lowry definition it is a proton donor, which it is. It only becomes an acid in water.Water has a limiting effect on the strength of acids and bases. All strong acids behave the same in water -- 1 M solutions of the strong acids all behave as 1 M solutions of the H3O+ ion -- and very weak acids cannot act as acids in water. Acid-base reactions don't have to occur in water, however.
Acids are dissociated forming hydrogen cations.
The water solution of sodium chloride is neutral.
These are acids.
dissociates into respective ions
These are acids or salts.
Both are very strong acids in water.
It gets closer to 7
Strong acids in solution are better conductors than weak acids in solution, and both are better than pure water.
When acids in water hydrogen positive ion is produced in excess. It is this hydrogen positive ion that gives acidity of a solution.